(*Full* East Fife Taxi Association press release and letter of objection posted over on the last page...)
So on one level it's all hugely impressive, and obviously someone has been through the legislation with a fine tooth comb
On the other hand, to a large extent it's just a blizzard of legalisms and the like that looks superficially impressive, but in reality doesn't amount to very much, and are just the kind of arguments made many times before regarding numerous councils, and which have enjoyed limited success.
No point going through it all, and after having a look through last night I'm not going to read it again in case I start waffling here with a thousand words or so, which would just be a waste of everyone's time.
But there's a lot of stuff about remoteness, and supervision and enforcement issues, and similar. But if you know the local trade then you could make a very similar case, albeit on a micro-scale rather than at the corporate behemoth level.
For example, the main people behind this objection have been making endless noise about enforcement and similar issues in the local trade in the past few years, and largely blaming the council. So to that extent, what they're trying to blame Uber for here potentially is to a large degree down to licensing authority regulation.
Same with the immigration stuff, for example. It's police and council who are responsible for all that via the application and vetting process for badges, in the main. So as long as Uber comply with their responsibility to make sure their drivers are badged, and vehicles plated, then in reality it's no different from the local trade.
Or there's that one about using a licence to the benefit of others who wouldn't be granted a licence. Not sure what the relevance of that is, really. What that's all about is making sure that criminals and gangsters aren't using licences which have been granted to 'front' or sham organisations, or people. I'm not sure that's really relevant. Of course, ultimately Uber is controlled remotely and via intricate business and corporate structures, but that's not quite the same as saying it's a front for gangsters, and all this does is obfuscate the whole thing. Although maybe that's the intention
As for the links to legislation at the bottom, I'm not sure if someone's made some sort of error there - some of the documents are just the contents pages of the legislation, basically. And, again, what's the point of including all that in a submission to the council - I'm pretty sure the council has access to the legislation they've been regulating the trade with since 1982
...as well as the council's own conditions of licence
The document linked to at the end is a list of some articles and cases involving Uber in the past, both under UK jurisdictions and globally. Again, most of this is historical, so although superficially impressive, I suspect it will have little clout with the council.
Strangest one is a link to the Uber employment status case in the Supreme Court. I mean, hello?
Maybe be careful what you're drawing attention to...
But perhaps the most obvious example of maybe leading people up to the top of the hill without obvious rationale is the mass submission of the same objection letter - already pushing 400 submissions, I think, so will very probably breeze past 500, or maybe even closer to 1,000.
So to that extent very impressive again
But, in simple terms, it's not a popularity contest. In hard legal terms, it shouldn't make a blind bit of difference if one such letter is submitted, or 1,000. If the substantive legal case is made, then it doesn't matter how many people have supported that. If the legal case isn't made, then it wouldn't matter if a million people had submitted the letter.
On the other hand, while presumably the legal advice to counciillors would be to ignore the numbers and strength of feeling, councillors don't have to follow that advice, and we all know about the imperfections and political dimension to quasi-judicial decision-making.
(And if councillors didn't approve the application, presumably Uber would appeal, but who knows about that?)
Anyway, it's obviously all very detailed and intricate, so no point banging on on here about stuff that none of us really know the details of. (For example, I've never even read Fife Council's conditions for booking offices in one of the links at the bottom, which are unbelievably brief and without much detail...)
And I'm not trying to poo-poo it all anyway, obviously, and just trying to be realistic about EFTA's chances...